Monitoring Social Participation: implementing the C.L.E.A.R model
Gerry Stoker
Why is social participation important Provides the bedrock of democracy
Drives effective communication between governors and governed: learning, trust and capacity to govern
Improves service delivery through knowledge exchange
Supports service delivery through c0-production
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Why monitor social participation? It is important to audit what is done and not done
in all area of public policy The responsibility of public authorities to respond
to citizens’ initiatives but also to be aware of gaps and omissions
Consider issues of equity, variety and impact of engagement
A question of judgement : how much participation do citizens want?
Citizens’ willingness to engage is not fixed but will reflect their sense of how public authorities are likely to respond
Existing research can be used to build an audit framework There is a lot of research done in this area: By surveys By case studies Even using randomised control trials That research is captured and then presented
in an audit framework: C.L.E.A.RDeveloped initially in work for the Council of
EuropeUsed by public authorities in a spirit of open-
minded investigation
To explore further Set out the Framework
Discuss the nature of the Audit process it supports
Consider how to put it into practice
Look out how to respond to the lessons it reveals
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CLEAR: an audit frameworkFactor Research Insight Audit check
Can do Resources matter: those in the control of the individual and those they can get access to
The resources that people have or can be offered access to as well as their confidence to use them
Like to Feeling a part of something stimulates a willingness to engage
A sense of involvement with the public entity that is the focus of engagement
Enabled to Participation is most often done collectively rather than individually
The civic infrastructure of organizations that organize participation
Asked to Mobilizing people into participation by asking for their input can make a big difference
How are citizens mobilized, what variety of approaches are on offer, who is reached
Responded to Judgements about the openness of the political system and its responsiveness are vital
Listening and responding: what systems are in place to deliver that?
C.L. E.A.R Audit : What type of framework is it? Its not about providing exact measure of social
participation
Its not about alarm bells
Its acts like a tin opener ...it enables exploration and investigation of what goes on inside
C.L.E.A.R framework is an aid to dialogue and debate
Used by public authorities best it collaboration with civic society institutions
Putting C.L.E.A.R into practice Use existing data sources where possible to keep down
costsIn-house expertise or employ specialist consultantsMix collecting quantitative information (e.g. those around
skills with qualitative techniques such as interviews or focus groups.
The precise mix will depend upon the resources available to the organisation and the amount of effort they want to commit to the diagnosis.
Important that the net is spread sufficiently widely to encourage appropriate learning
Can undertake an initial diagnosis in-house extending the process
More on putting into practice For each of the five factors the tool provides
a series of indicative questions (See Appendix A of paper ).
These questions suggest the types of issues that users of the tool might want to investigate under that heading.
Not all questions will be relevant in every context.
Moreover, in different local or national contexts it may be necessary to adapt the questions to suit the type of data that is available.
Where problems are identified solutions can be found Social participation presents complex
challenges
Public authorities can make a big difference by the way they work
Quick wins not easy to get but a long-term commitment to engagement brings reward
A vast amount of accessible international experience
Policy and Strategic Responses to Audit Lessons Policy Response
CAN DO Capacity Building aimed at individuals or communities
LIKE TO Sense of community, civic engagement, social capital and citizenship
ENABLED TO To support the civic infrastructure: a set of viable civic institutions or
stepping back to allow support to emerge
ASKED TO Public participation schemes that are diverse and reflexive : lessons abound
RESPONSED TO A public policy system that can show a capacity to respond
makes a difference
Final reflections The offer of participation can be there and sometimes
citizens will take it up and sometimes they will not. We know from research that there are reasons why
citizens do not want to engage in civic or political lifeBut equally we know that citizens’ interest in
engagement is not fixed and above all depends on signals sent out by public authorities.
If you ask citizens if their interest would increase if the political or decision-making system was more open and fairly constructed a substantial proportion switch to wanting to engage more( you also get a response if you offer a negative trigger).
Conclusion
The C.L.E.A.R tool is designed to be adaptable and usable in a variety of settings
The C.L.E.A.R framework is about attracting citizens back to public decision-making for positive reasons-because barriers are removed ,openness is promoted and responsiveness delivered